In case anyone was wondering, "CBD" stands for "Central Business District", essentially an area with a lot of office buildings. It is not related to weed
@@jamesonweimann4720 CBD is another part of weed. It's the part that doesn't get you high. CBD is rumored to be a useful remedy for insomnia, anxiety, and muscle aches.
@@TotallyNotRedneckYall - the meaning that watching2341 put up is the correct meaning and got hijacked because people who use weed cant pronounce 'cannabidiol'
He may have been called a notary but it's more like he's attorney. Will readings in the US are usually done by attorneys. Attorneys usually store the will. You usually utilize an attorney to compose the will.
I believe Executor was the word OP was looking for, although I could be wrong (Italian law). And yes, they wield extreme power, if not duly limited within the Will.
Notary Public, basically a solicitor on steroids who can be legal witness to the authenticity of documents to the extent they are still legal documents in overseas jurisdictions.
@@Kathdath Exactly, in Spain is the same thing. In fact, in Spain for important contracts (buying a house, lease agreament, etc...) is a good thing that a notary signs it too. Because it means the documents are legal so you can't be screwed. Basically will be a kind of lawyer that for these signings works for both parties and explains everything.
Wills, especially ones that transfer land ownership, are also taken extremely seriously in the US and forging or fraudulently altering a will can land you jail time as its seen as tampering with legal documents.
GOOD. MORNING. RED WHEEL AND ALL OF NEVERLAND!!! 😁😁👋👋👋 It's Friday. It's payday. Red Wheel's gonna getcha high on ProRevenge stories!!!! WHOOOOOO!!!! Let's have a Supercalifragilisticexpialidosis Friday, Everybody!!! 😁😁😁😁😁 Stay safe. Stay hydrated. Stay blessed. 🙏
Notaries even in the US can be fully qualified lawyers, contractor lawyer to be precise, every contract has to go through a notary to make it legally binding including wills
@@rosehearttoxic1691 they can be but most aren't. Most Noteries in the US are people like bank tellers, who offering the service as a side service. And as such charge considerable less. And and being legally binding has more to do with the wording of the document. All a notary stamp means in the US that verified peoperson witness that signature on the document is the signature of the person signing. In the US you wouldn't pay a noteried to draft a contract, but else where you might
Yeah, I have the social skills of a rock. I'll take a two seat table for myself and luckily I do look intimidating so I don't get bothered. Some rando just strolling up and taking a seat would put me on edge. Apparently, I get murder eyes when I'm on edge so it's not a comfortable experience for anyone.
First story, the person in question could have a social anxiety disorder and used the waiting for others to hide the fact. As a parent of a son suffering from this I understand this persons issues. Please don't judge it may not be rudeness, some people have trouble with social interactions.
OP in that story is just an a-hole and proved it by doing such and then gloating about it in a story like it was some revenge. What would have been more revenge is if the guy went batshit crazy on them as their anxiety kicked in and stabbed them with the plastic cutlery. OP had zero reason to sit there and would have been in the wrong if security came up. There is no reason you have to share your table in a busy food court.
Yeah, sometimes notaries in other countries have nearly the power of a judge. Mexico comes to mind. Which is why in California at least, you cannot do a direct translation of "notary public" into Spanish as we have a large population here from Mexico and that takes on a whole different meaning. Basically in the states, all a notary does is act as an unbiased witness.
Hey, RedWheel, as you seemed to be as surprised as I was what power the notary of the last story held, I looked it up. Apparently, they, unlike our American counterpart, they are part notary public, part Judge's paralegal, and part attorney. So, yeah, they are a bit more powerful than ours. Not someone you want to make the fool of...unless you like lightning bolts up your butt.
First, maybe his colleagues stood him up, which is a common enough occurrence, and your negativity is double injustice. Second, maybe he just wanted to sit by himself. We all need that sometimes and it's not anyone else's job to judge it.
Hey Redwheel. Thirsty Thursday and started with iced coffee again. Found out why I have been feeling so crappy. Maintenance people here yesterday and the bar that has the sink and dishwasher, was covered in front and inside with black mold and I have only been here a little over two months and asthma and COPD. Once they peeled it off the front and the first 1/2 hour or so of foul smell, I started feeling and breathing better. It will take a bit of time but now my doctor knows why by breathing is weird. So better days ♍️💜☮️
@@kirov33cp nope, just a misscomunication. On Uncle's will, he is leaving EVERYTHING to Aunt, as long Aunt wills EVERYTHING to Uncle's side of the family. Which is illegal to put on a will, you can name a sole inheritor but you can't put add that clause of "she wills to someone else". The first part resolves, so Aunt inherited everything, the second clause is not taken into consideration, so Aunt naming only Uncle's side of the family as her sole inheritors is ignored. Then you have the fraud and the idiots being erased from the will due to LAW.
Let me see if I have the last story correct. OP has an aunt and uncle. Aunt is directly related, uncle married into the family. Uncle dies several years before the aunt. Uncle's will leaves everything to the aunt, with the condition that SHE leave it to HER side of the family (assuming they went childless). Uncle's side doesn't like that and spends the several years in between to alter HER will to give everything to them. Cousin slips how much work went into that process which clued OP into discovering that the Uncle's side had committed fraud. Did I get that right?
Yeah sounded like the guy that opens the door of his car in a traffic jam to "teach the reckless motorcyclists a lesson" when they try to pass through the cars.
Could someone clarify what happened in the last story? It seemed to switch from her aunt being biological to her uncle being that? I think I missed something...
@@kitsuneneko2567 The Aunt's will was doctored. It then ment the Uncle's will was void. If the uncle's family had left well enough alone everything would of been theirs anyway. Because they got greedy and removed pages and also got writings from an earlier will they ruined their own shot at everything.
Here what I understand what happened The Uncle give everything to his wife(the Aunt) , with a contract that she would give it to the uncle's family in her will (only what remained from his will) When the uncle's family doctored the aunt's will they voided the agreement (Will is void). Therefore everything the aunt owned went to her closest living relatives.
@@vexxama Looks like Redking had a better read than me. The uncle gifted his possessions to the aunt, with stipulations that it goes to his family in her passing. They doctored her will to change it f on just his stuff to her stuff as well. The listing if the uncle's stuff at the end is what they lost because they wanted it all not just his stuff.
Mr. Company Man was too stupid, targeted good employees, and suffered for it. Hahahaha, I'd have loved to see his face after he got chewed out and quit (likely crying like the baby I imagine him to be)
In case anyone was wondering, "CBD" stands for "Central Business District", essentially an area with a lot of office buildings. It is not related to weed
So what does it mean when it is related to mean
@@jamesonweimann4720 CBD is another part of weed. It's the part that doesn't get you high. CBD is rumored to be a useful remedy for insomnia, anxiety, and muscle aches.
@@TotallyNotRedneckYall 🤣
Thank you. I was very very confused!
@@TotallyNotRedneckYall - the meaning that watching2341 put up is the correct meaning and got hijacked because people who use weed cant pronounce 'cannabidiol'
Good morning RedWheel have a great Friday 👍 Have a great day everyone 👋😃🤗😎
Good morning all my wonderful red wheel fellows. I hope you all have a great weekend! Enjoy the stories! Much love for you all!
Thank you Tamar! 💐🌸💮🏵🌹🥀🌺🌴🌵🌷🌿
And thank you, Red Wheel and the Crimson cat 🐺
@@ladytenor9876 not a problem. Please stay safe and I'll see you this afternoon.
Regarding the greedy relatives: "Which side of your family is the nicest? The OP could have replied: " Every side is suicide." (Sam Levenson)
Oh, Man!! That last story was excellent!!! Greed never gets anyone anywhere and the plunge the relatives took was oh, so well deserved
Hi RedWheel hope you are well and safe and are having a great day. Thanks for sharing. Please stay safe everyone.🏴😷😁👍. Have a wonderful day
He may have been called a notary but it's more like he's attorney. Will readings in the US are usually done by attorneys. Attorneys usually store the will. You usually utilize an attorney to compose the will.
I believe Executor was the word OP was looking for, although I could be wrong (Italian law). And yes, they wield extreme power, if not duly limited within the Will.
I use attornies for periodic colon cleansing.
Notary Public, basically a solicitor on steroids who can be legal witness to the authenticity of documents to the extent they are still legal documents in overseas jurisdictions.
@@Kathdath Exactly, in Spain is the same thing. In fact, in Spain for important contracts (buying a house, lease agreament, etc...) is a good thing that a notary signs it too. Because it means the documents are legal so you can't be screwed. Basically will be a kind of lawyer that for these signings works for both parties and explains everything.
Wills, especially ones that transfer land ownership, are also taken extremely seriously in the US and forging or fraudulently altering a will can land you jail time as its seen as tampering with legal documents.
Good morning RedWheel
Good morning everyone 😊😊😊
GOOD. MORNING. RED WHEEL AND ALL OF NEVERLAND!!! 😁😁👋👋👋
It's Friday.
It's payday.
Red Wheel's gonna getcha high on ProRevenge stories!!!!
WHOOOOOO!!!!
Let's have a Supercalifragilisticexpialidosis Friday, Everybody!!! 😁😁😁😁😁
Stay safe. Stay hydrated. Stay blessed. 🙏
Holy cow... that was nuclear revenge on the 2nd story. Loved it. Unfortunately some families are like that and that is so sad.
1:14
Nope -- I'm on that dude's side. I wouldn't share a table either.
Love the last story. Shows what an ear, some knowledge & the law is able to do.
Notaries. Outside. Of the US are fully qualified lawyers and charge lawyer rates
Notaries even in the US can be fully qualified lawyers, contractor lawyer to be precise, every contract has to go through a notary to make it legally binding including wills
@@rosehearttoxic1691 they can be but most aren't. Most Noteries in the US are people like bank tellers, who offering the service as a side service. And as such charge considerable less. And and being legally binding has more to do with the wording of the document. All a notary stamp means in the US that verified peoperson witness that signature on the document is the signature of the person signing. In the US you wouldn't pay a noteried to draft a contract, but else where you might
Not sure if jerk or someone with incredibly bad anxiety trying to eat as best they can
Yeah, I have the social skills of a rock. I'll take a two seat table for myself and luckily I do look intimidating so I don't get bothered. Some rando just strolling up and taking a seat would put me on edge.
Apparently, I get murder eyes when I'm on edge so it's not a comfortable experience for anyone.
First story, the person in question could have a social anxiety disorder and used the waiting for others to hide the fact. As a parent of a son suffering from this I understand this persons issues. Please don't judge it may not be rudeness, some people have trouble with social interactions.
OP in that story is just an a-hole and proved it by doing such and then gloating about it in a story like it was some revenge. What would have been more revenge is if the guy went batshit crazy on them as their anxiety kicked in and stabbed them with the plastic cutlery. OP had zero reason to sit there and would have been in the wrong if security came up. There is no reason you have to share your table in a busy food court.
In the last story: the OPs uncle is a narcissist from what the OP is describing.
Gliiiiiide into Friday with Redwheel dropping barz.
Hello red wheel (UK)
That cousin was stupid enough to open his mouth and I'm also glad that the greedy relatives didn't get away with that
That should be a saying "The notaries in Italy are powerful people." I'll have to put that on a t-shirt
Yeah, sometimes notaries in other countries have nearly the power of a judge. Mexico comes to mind.
Which is why in California at least, you cannot do a direct translation of "notary public" into Spanish as we have a large population here from Mexico and that takes on a whole different meaning.
Basically in the states, all a notary does is act as an unbiased witness.
Last story, greed will imprison us all.
That last story was perfection!
Hey, RedWheel, as you seemed to be as surprised as I was what power the notary of the last story held, I looked it up. Apparently, they, unlike our American counterpart, they are part notary public, part Judge's paralegal, and part attorney. So, yeah, they are a bit more powerful than ours. Not someone you want to make the fool of...unless you like lightning bolts up your butt.
First, maybe his colleagues stood him up, which is a common enough occurrence, and your negativity is double injustice. Second, maybe he just wanted to sit by himself. We all need that sometimes and it's not anyone else's job to judge it.
Good Friday morning Redwheel. Thanks again for the stories.
👍👍👍👍
Fraud comes back to bite.
£ pounds
€ euros
Hey Redwheel. Thirsty Thursday and started with iced coffee again. Found out why I have been feeling so crappy. Maintenance people here yesterday and the bar that has the sink and dishwasher, was covered in front and inside with black mold and I have only been here a little over two months and asthma and COPD. Once they peeled it off the front and the first 1/2 hour or so of foul smell, I started feeling and breathing better. It will take a bit of time but now my doctor knows why by breathing is weird. So better days ♍️💜☮️
So who’s up for some red apple next Thursday
On the last story why did the relative switch from being OP’s Aunt to the Uncle?
Two different wills were read. One will from the aunt. The other from the uncle.
The two wills isn’t in question, but the story went from it being OP’s Aunt who left them something in the will to it being the Uncle
@@michaels1554 Lol now i see. Maybe OP slipped up in the story somewhere and mistyped
@@kirov33cp nope, just a misscomunication.
On Uncle's will, he is leaving EVERYTHING to Aunt, as long Aunt wills EVERYTHING to Uncle's side of the family. Which is illegal to put on a will, you can name a sole inheritor but you can't put add that clause of "she wills to someone else".
The first part resolves, so Aunt inherited everything, the second clause is not taken into consideration, so Aunt naming only Uncle's side of the family as her sole inheritors is ignored.
Then you have the fraud and the idiots being erased from the will due to LAW.
Let me see if I have the last story correct. OP has an aunt and uncle. Aunt is directly related, uncle married into the family. Uncle dies several years before the aunt. Uncle's will leaves everything to the aunt, with the condition that SHE leave it to HER side of the family (assuming they went childless). Uncle's side doesn't like that and spends the several years in between to alter HER will to give everything to them. Cousin slips how much work went into that process which clued OP into discovering that the Uncle's side had committed fraud.
Did I get that right?
Thank you
I'm 99.999% certain that this is a reupload. Either that or it's proof that the Mandela Effect is a real thing.
€ = Euro, not pound!
Have you heard the tragedy of Darth Plaguies the wise?
Your continued posting of this exact same comment is the definition of spam. You are being reported
@@jezeski2011 Quick question, why?
Never underestimate the power of words from stupid people. They can give you vast fortunes. :)
What a refreshing Friday morning story. Thanks RedWheel! 🎡
First story, the OP sounds like a male Karen. Think of the story from the perspective of the "table hog" who was probably socially anxious.
Yeah sounded like the guy that opens the door of his car in a traffic jam to "teach the reckless motorcyclists a lesson" when they try to pass through the cars.
So this is for all Reddit readers not just you. Is it really so hard to go in and edit your video so your not repeating the same line twice?
Sadly, I side with the guy eating in the food court. I have a "Thing" about eating with strangers.
Then don't eat where a pile of people are going to gather; no-brainer
@@jezeski2011 . My "Thing" about eating with strangers stems back to childhood. It predates social distancing by about 20 years.
@@cindydott452 My comment still applies
WOW!!! THE WILL. GREED WILL MAKE YOU DO STUPID THINGS. ARROGANT SODS.. LOLL
Could someone clarify what happened in the last story? It seemed to switch from her aunt being biological to her uncle being that? I think I missed something...
@@kitsuneneko2567 The Aunt's will was doctored. It then ment the Uncle's will was void. If the uncle's family had left well enough alone everything would of been theirs anyway.
Because they got greedy and removed pages and also got writings from an earlier will they ruined their own shot at everything.
@@Blitzwaffen so basically their tampering was completely unnecessary? And in fact voided a will that favoured them anyway?
Here what I understand what happened
The Uncle give everything to his wife(the Aunt) , with a contract that she would give it to the uncle's family in her will (only what remained from his will)
When the uncle's family doctored the aunt's will they voided the agreement (Will is void). Therefore everything the aunt owned went to her closest living relatives.
@@vexxama Looks like Redking had a better read than me. The uncle gifted his possessions to the aunt, with stipulations that it goes to his family in her passing.
They doctored her will to change it f on just his stuff to her stuff as well.
The listing if the uncle's stuff at the end is what they lost because they wanted it all not just his stuff.
@@Blitzwaffen ah ok that makes sense... But was it the prior uncle who died? Or the current "her husband"?
Mr. Company Man was too stupid, targeted good employees, and suffered for it. Hahahaha, I'd have loved to see his face after he got chewed out and quit (likely crying like the baby I imagine him to be)
I wonder if Aunt's crappy family used a ouija board or held a seance with a psychic medium to contact Uncle about the will. 🤔😉
🌟🌟🌟🌟
Wow that last one blew me away
Woop woop! Edit: Never before had I commented within ten seconds of a video pop up XD
Thanks for another video.